Living and Working in Hungary

Transcription

Living and Working in Hungary
Living and Working in Hungary
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Living and Working in Hungary
GENERAL INFORMATION ON HUNGARY
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MOVING TO HUNGARY
Moving of goods
Moving of animals and plants
Moving of financial assets
The driving licence
Registration procedures, residence permit
Procedural authorities
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WORKING CONDITIONS
Recruitment
Applications
Recognition of diplomas and qualifications
Conclusion of employment contracts
Remuneration
Working time
Annual leave
Leave (sickness, maternity etc.)
End of employment
Occupational risks
Representation of workers
Work disputes - Strikes
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LIVING CONDITIONS
The political, administrative and legal system
Taxes and charges on labour
Incomes and cost of living
Shopping
Accommodation
The cultural and social life
Transport
The Hungarian education system
Private life (birth, marriage, deaths)
The health system
Health care benefits include financial benefits and benefits in kind
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SOCIAL SECURITY
General organisation
Sickness insurance
Maternity insurance
Invalidity insurance
Old-age insurance
Survivors’ pensions
Insurance for occupational accidents and diseases
Family benefits
Unemployment benefits
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Living and Working in Hungary
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Living and Working in Hungary
Full country name
Area
Republic of Hungary
92966 sq km
Time Zone
GMT+1hr
Population
10.1 million
Capital City
Budapest
People
Language
Religion
Government
Currency
Major Industries
Major Trading Partners
89.9% Hungarian,
4% Roma, 2.6% German,
0.8% Slovak, 0.7% Romanian
Hungarian
68% Roman Catholic,
21% Reformed (Calvinist) Protestant,
6% Evangelical (Lutheran),
5% other
Parliamentary democracy
Hungarian Forint (HUF)
Mining, metallurgy, agriculture,
construction materials,
processed foods, textiles,
chemicals (especially pharmaceuticals)
and motor vehicles
Germany, Austria, Italy, Russia
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Moving of goods
The Act of Customs (CXXVI. of 2003.) contains harmonized regulation with the rules
of the European Union.
These are as follows
a) Regulation No 2913/1992 of the European
Council,
b) Regulation No 2454/1993 of the European
Commission on the Execution of Regulation No 2913/1992 of the European Council,
c) Regulation No 918/1983 of the European
Council,
d) Regulation No 2658/1987 of the European
Council.
According to Regulation No 918/1983 of the
European Council moveable property imported or forwarded into Hungary by those
living outside of the Community and furnishing a second home in Hungary may be
free of any duties. The property must be for
domestic purpose and in the ownership of
the person for at least six months before the
move and must be quantitavely and considering the nature suitable for furnishing the
second home.
Property for the purpose of domestic means
personal properties, clothes, furniture and
equipments.
Moving of animals and plants
Moveable property imported or forwarded
into Hungary by those living in the area of the
European Community may be free of any duties if that property is inheritance. But there
are two exceptions from these rules: that the
quantity of cattle stock exceeds the usual
family requirement and the stock of agricultural products.
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Moving of financial assets
Transfer of financial goods is largely determined by the regulations on the free movement of capital. In the process of accession to
the EU, Hungary has gradually implemented
the free movement of the foregoing capital
transfers. Liberalisation has thus been implemented, i.e. the following financial goods are
allowed to move freely:
• direct investment in enterprises, winding up
and relocating home such investment, and
free movement of profit arising from such
investments;
• unlimited movement of capital and payments between persons with permanent
residence in the Community and in Hungary;
• full freedom in respect of foreign currency
operations (rights to contracts, e.g. opening
accounts, with credit institutions).
A temporary breach of the principle of free
movement of capital exists in two areas, in
terms of EU citizens acquiring ownership
of arable or productive land, and in respect
of acquiring a secondary residence. The EU
Member States accepted that Hungary could
maintain its ban on foreign citizens and enterprises with legal personality acquiring
ownership of arable land for seven years following accession. This means that the above
persons may not acquire ownership rights
to arable land. Hungary was also granted a
further five-year temporary exemption from
applying Community law in respect of a secondary residence.
Useful links
: : Ministry of Finance : :
• www.p-m.hu •
The driving licence
Driving licences issued in all EU Member
States shall be deemed to comply with Hungarian legal regulations. No naturalisation
procedure is required for driving licences in
this case. Should a foreign citizen request the
naturalisation of a foreign driving licence, this
shall be completed without any obligation to
take an examination.
Registration procedures,
residence permit
Foreigners shall give notification of their accommodation in Hungary within three working days of their arrival, by providing the following data:
• identification data for natural persons;
• citizenship;
• data identifying passport document;
• accommodation address;
• start and expected final date for use of the
accommodation;
• identification number of the residence permit.
If the accommodation is not commercial accommodation or accommodation maintained by a legal entity, the notification obligation shall be performed in person by the
foreigner or the accommodation provider
to the competent area authority responsible
for policing foreigners for the accommodation. The notification obligation may also be
performed directly or by means of the competent settlement’s (or district of Budapest)
local government registrar for the accommodation.
The general regulations on foreigners travelling to and residing in Hungary shall be applied, with defined variations, to EEA citizens
and their family members travelling and residing here.
Citizens of EEA countries may travel to Hungary without a visa, with a valid passport or
valid personal identity card. They may reside on the territory of the country without
any further permits for a period of no more
than 90 days. Stays of longer than 90 days
do not require a visa, however a residence
permit shall be requested in person on the
prescribed form. The residence permit verifies that the holder enjoys residency or settlement rights on the territory of the Republic
of Hungary. Accompanying family members
also require a residence permit, which the
family member shall be granted by means of
the EEA citizen, as a derivative right.
Foreigners shall prove the existence of fullscale, all-risk health insurance for the entire
period of residence in Hungary, by means of
documents.
The period of validity of the residence permit
shall be two years, which may be extended.
Special cases
• in the event of residency directed at working
or practising other incomeearning activity
for a specified period, the authority may restrict the period of validity of the residence
permit to the period of work or practice of
the activity;
• if an unemployed or job-seeking EEA citizen
wishes to come to Hungary for the purpose
of employment, the authority shall determine the period of validity of their residence
permit such that it may not exceed six
months;
• the period of validity for students’residence
permits shall be the period of study, or conduct of professional practice, and in the
event of a longer study period shall be one
year, which may be extended.
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Procedural authorities
Office for Immigration and Citizenship (Budapest, 11th District, Budafoki út 60.) and its
regional agencies, border guard authority
responsible for policing foreigners, foreign
representative authorised to issue visas, and
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
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Useful links
: : Ministry of Foreign Affairs : :
• www.kulugyminiszterium.hu •
Recruitment
Employment agency activity in Hungary is
conducted by the State Employment Service
and private employment agencies on the
basis of conditions specified in legal regulations.
Information related to the service is available
on the SES website, where current job vacancies may be viewed. Also the list of registered
private employment agencies and those hiring labour can be found on the SES website.
The EURES (European Recruitment Service)
agency system is also directly available from
the SES site, where information is available on
unfilled vacancies in Hungary.
The agency service of SES is free of charge to
both employers and jobseekers. Anyone conducting private employment agency activity
may not claim charges or costs from jobseekers.
Applications
Professional CVs, largely complying with CV
norms employed in other countries in Europe,
are usually typewritten and, where required
in the advertisement, completed by hand.
The entire CV should be no more than one
or two pages long and should always include
the following details:
• Personal data
• Educational qualifications (chronological order, starting with the most recent)
• Courses (chronological order, starting with
the most recent)
• Workplaces (chronological order, starting
wit the most recent)
• Computer skills
• Language skills, driving licence
• Hobbies, leisure activities
A letter of motivation, addressed to the organisation advertising the post or the potential employer, contains important data not
included in the CV. The letter of motivation
should be no more than one page long and,
unlike the CV, should always be signed.
It is also worth giving references, possibly for
work of which the applicant is proud, or those
able to give an objective, but positive picture
of the applicant. When providing such references, the applicant should speak to the relevant person in advance, to ask whether they
could be quoted on the CV, including their
telephone number, position and company
name.
The applicant should always attach documents proving qualifications necessary to
the line of work and copies of language exam
certificates with the application.
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Recognition of diplomas
and qualifications
Recognition of the level of qualifications certified by advanced diplomas and of the specialist training certified thereby is the task of
the Hungarian Equivalency and Information
Centre (HEIC), while naturalisation of scientific grades is performed by the domestic
universities.
Recognition of certificates or diplomas may
be requested by anyone domiciled in Hungary. In addition, the applicant shall verify his or
her citizenship by means of a personal identity card, passport or driving licence. However,
anyone applying for recognition for the purpose of further study or inclusion of partial
studies need not be domiciled in Hungary.
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Separate rules refer to the recognition of diplomas verifying specialist training acquired
abroad as a general medical practitioner,
dentist or chemist:
• recognition is only possible in the event of
university qualification;
• a professional examination shall always be
taken, which is subject to charges;
• decisions taken by a professional committee;
• other additional conditions may apply.
Useful links
: : Hungarian Equivalency and
Information Centre ‒ HEIC : :
• www.ekvivalencia.hu •
Conclusion of employment contracts
The regulations governing employment
can essentially be found in the following
• Law XXII of 1992 on the Labour Code contains the most important guaranteed regulations in respect of employment.
• Regulations more beneficial to the emploee
may be established in the collective cotract,
or in the absence thereof, by agreement between the parties.
• The legal effect of law XXIII of 1992 on the
Legal Status of Public Officials (Public Officials Act) extends to public administration
agencies, offices of local government representative bodies, and county/Budapest
public administration offices or agencies in
a legal relationship with such (only Hungarian citizens may be public officials).
• Law XXXIII of 1992 on the Legal Status of Public Employees contains the third element of
differentiated regulation, extending to the
legal relationship of those employed at budgetary institutions.
In addition to these three legal relationships,
Hungarian law recognises three other atypical forms of employment. These are distance
working, working from home, and borrowing
labour.
Employment is entered into by means of a
contract of employment. The contract of employment shall be compiled in writing and
shall contain the following elements:
• names and titles of the parties;
• agreement on the employee’s job description;
• agreement on the basic wage,
• agreement on the location for completing
work.
Other matters may also be agreed up-on (e.g.
trial period, period of notice, grounds for exceptional notice, provisions over and above
wages, cost bearing, etc.).
Employment may be established for a fixed
or indefinite period. In the absence of an
agreement to the contrary, the employment
shall come into being for an indefinite period.
The fixed period, including establishing new
employment, may not exceed five years. The
parties may transform or amend the contractual period. Even without agreement, the
contract of employment may change from a
fixed to an indefinite period if the employee
continues to work, with the knowledge of the
direct manager, for at least one day following
the expiry of the term.
A trial period may be specified in contracts
of employment for fixed and indefinite periods. The trial period shall be 30 days. Collective agreements or other agreements may be
made by the parties to the contrary, but a trial
period may not last more than three months.
Extension of the trial period is prohibited.
During the trial period, either party may terminate the employment with immediate effect, without giving reasons.
The employee may be employed by several
employers simultaneously. The employee is
obliged to notify the employer if, during the
period of employment, he or she enters into
other employment or another legal relationship aimed at completing work (e.g. mandate
or contractors’legal relationship). Based on
such notification, the employer may acknowledge the completion of work, but may also
prohibit such, if it damages the employer’s
rightful economic interest.
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Remuneration
The right to get minimum wage for employees working in Hungary is guaranteed by
the Labour Code. The compulsory minimum
wage due to employees and the scope of its
effect shall be determined by the Government. A regular review of its level shall be
made. The degree of regularity of such review
depends on the speed of change in economic circumstances. In general, the amount shall
be reviewed annually.
As of January 1st, 2006, the amount of minimum wage applying for monthly pay is
62 500 HUF, weekly pay is 14 400 HUF, daily
pay is 2 880 HUF and hourly pay is 360 HUF.
The amount of minimum wage is not charged by income tax. Social insurance and labour market contributions of employers and
employees must be paid according to the
general rate.
In specified cases, the employee shall also
be entitled to supplementary wages which,
in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, shall be calculated on the basis of the
employee’s basic wage.
By law, the employee is entitled to
• a night-time supplement (15%);
• a shift-work supplement
(afternoons - 15%, nights - 30%);
• an overtime supplement
(50%, or the equivalent time in lieu);
• a supplement paid in return for work completed on weekly rest days or bank holidays
(50% and a day off, or 100% including attendance charge on bank holidays);
• a supplement due for stand-by (25%).
The collective agreement or agreements
made between the parties may agree on additional supplements.
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Working time
According to the Labour Code, full-time
work involves eight hours’ work a day or 40
hours’work a week. Regulations on employment or agreements between the parties
may establish a shorter or, for lines of work
that have a stand-by nature either fully or in
part, longer working hours, but not in excess
of 12 hours a day, or 60 hours a week.
Annual leave
Employees shall be entitled to regular leave
in each calendar year in which they are employed, serving to assist in rest and recuperation
Regular leave consists of basic and extra holidays. Basic holidays depend solely on the age
of the employee. Employees are first due longer basic holidays in the year in which they
reach the specified age.
Basic holiday entitlement is as follows
• up to the age of 25: 20 working days;
• from the age of 25: 21 working days;
• up to the age of 31: an additional working
day every three years;
• up to the age of 45: an additional working
day every two years;
• from the age of 45: 30 working days.
The law does not exclude the possibility of
the employer granting employees more basic leave than that specified by law, under a
collective agreement or contract of employment.
The law defines the following three compulsory cases for unpaid leave:
1. Pregnant women or women giving birth
are entitled to 24 weeks’maternity (unpaid) leave. For the time of maternity
leave, they shall be entitled to pregnancy
and confinement benefit from the social
insurance fund. At the request of the employee, unpaid leave may be taken for
the purpose of childcare until the child
reaches the age of three, or the age of
14 in the event of a child suffering longterm illness or having a serious disability.
Childcare benefit is due for the period of
caring leave.
2. Upon request, the employee is entitled
to unpaid leave if he or she looks after or
cares for a close relative requiring longterm (expected to exceed 30 days’) care
or nursing. This period may not be more
than two years. The local government
registrar for the settlement may establish
payment of a nursing fee to the person
on caring leave for such a period.
3. The employee shall be allowed unpaidleave of up to one year if building a house
from his or her own resources. Entitlement to unpaid leave is due to the employee named in the building permit or
a spouse (partner) living with him or her.
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Leave (sickness, maternity etc.)
For periods of earning incapacity due to illness,
employees are entitled to 15 days’sickness
leave per calendar year. Sickness leave entitlement is due to employees over and above
regular leave. Days not taken in the relevant
year may not be claimed at a later date. Sickness leave of 15 days is due to employees
who were in employment over the entire
calendar year. It may be taken in several parts
or entirely in one go. The employee may only
be entitled to sick pay from the sixteenth day.
Employees are also entitled to sickness leave
under other employment relationships, and if
employed part-time or as pensioners.
If the earning incapacity arises as a result of an
industrial accident or occupational disease,
the employee shall receive accident sick pay
and shall not be entitled to sickness leave.
The employee shall receive remuneration for
the period of sickness leave, to be funded by
the employer. The amount thereof shall be
80% of the attendance fee. Sickness leave is
also due for one calendar year. As a result,
in the event of an employment relationship
commencing during the year, the employee
shall be entitled to the pro rata share of sickness leave due for the calendar year. However, if the employee was employed during
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ceed the share of sickness leave not yet taken
for the calendar year. This regulation relates
to the fact that upon termination of employment, the certification issued to the employee shall contain the period of sickness leave
taken by the employee in the year of termination of employment. Sickness leave, similarly
to regular leave, may be taken for working
days under the schedule of work.
Pregnant women or women giving birth are
entitled to 27 weeks’ maternity leave, which
shall be issued such that four weeks thereof
should be taken before the expected date of
birth.
Pregnancy and confinement benefit is due
for all periods of maternity leave on the basis
of the employee’s social insurance coverage,
which accounts for 70% of the employee’s
average daily salary.
Leave for having children
The employee is entitled to unpaid leave
• for the purpose of caring for a child up to
the age of three;
• until the child reaches the age of 14, for the
purpose of childcare if the employee receives childcare benefit;
• until the child reaches the age of 12, in order
to look after a child with an illness at home.
End of employment
Employment may be terminated
• by mutual agreement between the employer and employee;
• by regular notice;
• by exceptional notice;
• with immediate effect during the trial period.
By law, fixed period employment may only
be terminated by mutual agreement, or exceptional notice, or with immediate effect
in the event of stipulation of a trial period.
The employer may terminate the employee’s
fixed period employment contrary to the
foregoing provision. However, the employee
shall then be entitled to one year’s average
salary and, if the remaining time of the fixed
period is shorter than one year, he or she shall
receive the average salary for the remaining
period. Agreements or declarations directed
at terminating employment shall be made
in writing. Any deviation from the foregoing
shall be invalid.
Mutual agreement shall be established between the employer and employee. Both the
employer and employee may terminate employment for an indefinite period by serving
regular notice.
Notice shall be given in writing. Notice takes
effect upon delivery to the relevant party. The
employer shall be obliged to give reasons for
serving notice, which reasons shall clearly indicate the cause of such notice.
The grounds for notice may only be grounds
related to the employee’s capabilities or conduct in respect of employment or the employer’s operations. The employer may give
notice without reasons if the employee has
obtained entitlement to old age pension or
is in receipt of an advanced old age pension
or service pension. The law does not contain
any restrictive provisions for regular notice
served by the employee.
The employer may generally exercise regular
notice at any time. However, serving notice is
excluded in the event of notice prohibition,
and serious grounds for notice are required in
the event of restrictions on notice.
The notice period lasts for at least 30 days, but
may not exceed one year. Such notice period
becomes longer according to the time spent
in the employment of the employer. In the
event of regular notice, the employer shall be
obliged to exempt the employee from completing work. This shall cover half the period
of notice, though in the event of provision
thereof in a decision taken at the discretion of
the employer, or in the collective agreement
or contract of employment, the notice period
may exempt the employee from carrying out
work for the entire period. Regular wages are
due for the period of notice spent in work,
and average salary is due for the period not
spent in work.
Severance pay relates to the employer terminating employment by serving regular
notice. The employee shall also be entitled to
such if the employer is terminated without a
legal successor.
A further condition for severance pay is that
the employee was employed by the employer for at least three years.
The employee is not entitled to severance
pay if he or she is classified as a pensioner by
the time of termination of employment at
the latest.
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The collective agreement or contract of employment may determine severance pay in a
more favourable amount than the level defined by law.
The essential difference between ordinary
and extraordinary notice is that, in the case
of the latter, employment is terminated after
notice has been served. Both the employer
and the employee have the option of terminating employment for the following specified reasons:
• if the other party breaches a material obligation arising from the employment intentionally, or by gross neglect, or
• otherwise exhibits conduct rendering the
continuation of employment impossible.
During the trial period, either party may terminate the legal relationship with immediate
effect without giving reasons.
Occupational risks
Supervision of labour affairs is performed by
the supervisors of the county boards of the
National Employment Safety and Labour
Board, who examine the observance of regulations on completion of work.
The provisions relating to employment protection are contained in law No. XCIII of 1993.
The stipulations of this law shall be applied
to all organised work (employment, public
employees’ legal relationship, public service
legal relationship), and to students’ and pupils’ relationships in the course of practical
training, and so on.
The law also contains obligations for employers and employees in respect of employment
protection.
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The employer shall ensure conditions for safe
work not posing a danger to health. The employer may not replace performance of these
criteria by paying the employee financial or
other rewards.
Representation of workers
In order to protect employees’economic and
social rights and enforce their interests more
effectively, they are entitled to form and operate organisations to represent their interests. The two relevant forms are trade unions
and works councils.
Work disputes - Strikes
The employee may initiate labour law disputes to enforce demands originating from
his or her employment. In addition, trade
unions and works councils may initiate legal
disputes to enforce claims arising from the
Labour Code, the collective agreement or
works agreements. Labour law disputes shall
be conducted in court. Labour courts operate
in all counties and in Budapest. The petition
shall be submitted to the competent labour
court for the registered seat of the employer.
Employees are entitled to strike to safeguard
their economic and social interests, pursuant to the constitution and the Strikes Act.
Participation in strikes shall be voluntary,
and nobody may force participation therein
or abstention thereof. Coercion may not be
used against workers participating in lawful
strikes with the aim of ending the suspension
of work
Useful links
: : Ministry of Employment and Labour : :
• www.fmm.gov.hu •
: : Public Employment Service : :
•www.afsz.hu •
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The political, administrative
and legal system
Hungary has been a republic operating as
a democratic constitutional state since 23
October 1989. The constitution, acts and a
whole series of lower-level legal regulations
guarantee the predominan-ce of rights under the law of continental Europe. Legal
regulations comply with international norms,
and Hungary is a member of the UN, and of
the European Union, with effect from 1 May
2004, as well as a participant in all major international conventions.
The legal system is hierarchical, i.e. lowerlevel legal regulations have to comply with
higher-level laws. The Hungarian legal system
is founded on written legal regulations and
does not recognise case law.
Hungary’s public administration is divi-ded
into 19 counties and the capital city; while
Budapest is broken down into 23 districts.
The major units of public administration are
Budapest, the counties, cities and villages. In
compliance with the requirements of the European Union, seven planning and statistical
regions (Central Hungary, Central Transdanubia, West Transdanubia, South Transdanubia,
North Hungary, North Great Hungarian Plain,
South Great Hungarian Plain) have been
formed in Hungary, fully covering the counties, and county and regional development
councils have been established.
Following the social and political changes
(after 1989), a multi-party system was formed
in Hungary. Anyone is free to form a party in
compliance with the Political Parties Act.
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Parliamentary elections take place every four
years, with the most recent being in spring
2002. Since the social and political changes,
parliamentary elections have always been accompanied by a change of government. The
election system rests on two pillars: representatives can be voted into Parliament individually and on party lists, and citizens are thus
entitled to vote for party lists and individual
candidates. Local government elections are
held in the same year as parliamentary elections. Only parties receiving at least 5% of the
vote at the election gain access to Parliament.
The President of the Republic calls upon the
candidate from the winning party to form a
government.
After the 2002 elections, the most significant
parties playing a role in political life were the
following:
• Fidesz - Hungarian Civil Party: a conservative,
right-wing party;
• Hungarian Democratic Forum: Christian
conservative, right-wing party;
• Hungarian Socialist Party: party representing
social, left-wing values;
• Alliance of Free Democrats, liberal party
Useful links
: : Ministry of Justice : :
• www.im.hu •
: : Government portal : :
• www.magyarorszag.hu •
: : Various information about Budapest : :
• www.budapest.hu •
: : Homepages of the
Hungarian political parties : :
• part.lap.hu •
: : About politics : :
• politika.lap.hu •
Taxes and charges on labour
The following items are deducted from the
gross income of private individuals
• 8.5% private pension fund contribution;
• 0.5% social insurance contribution;
• 4% health care contribution;
• 1% employee contribution;
• personal income tax.
The regulations of conventions on avoidance
of dual taxation primarily govern taxation
of income originating from employment in
Hungary of foreign private individuals.
The conventions excluding dual taxation
specify in which of the two contracting states
the individual types of income may be taxed
and also stipulate how dual taxation should
be avoided in respect of incomes that could
be taxed in both countries. As a result, where
no convention exists on avoidance of dual
taxation with the given state, it is possible
that the taxpayer will have to pay tax in two
states on foreign income and assets.
If, under the convention, income is taxable
in Hungary, the provisions of law No. CXVII
of 1995 on Personal Income Tax shall be applied, with certain special provisions in respect of foreigners. The primary difference
is that the tax obligation is only incumbent
upon foreign private individuals for income
earned in Hungary.
In respect of taxable incomes in Hungary, tax
liability shall encumber foreign private individuals pursuant to domestic tax regulations.
Hereunder
• the employer shall deduct a tax advance
from the employee’s wages,
• the employee shall submit tax returns on
domestic incomes earned in the given year
and on the personal income tax thereon, or
• tax may be determined by the employer on
the basis of a passport number, as a tax identifier.
Where the legal conditions are fulfilled, the
foreign private individual is also entitled to
all tax allowances allowed for under the Personal Income Tax Act (e.g. tax credits).
Tax advances payable by private individuals
conducting independent activity shall be established and paid by the private individual to
the competent tax authority for the domicile.
Tax advances shall be paid quarterly by the
12th day of the month following the relevant
quarter. In determining the tax advance, income shall be calculated from the beginning
of the year until the end of the given quarter,
and the amount of tax shall be calculated on
the basis of the schedule of taxes. Advances
already paid shall be deducted from amounts
thus established, and the difference shall be
paid as the relevant quarterly advance.
Sole entrepreneurs may choose fixed lump
sum taxation or tax payment on entrepreneurial income. Sole entrepreneurs choosing fixed taxation shall pay the tax advance
by the 12th day of the month following the
relevant quarter, which amount shall be the
differential between the fixed tax on income
calculated from the start of the year and tax
advances already paid.
Useful links
: : National Health Insurance Fund : :
• www.oep.hu •
: : Ministry of Finance : :
• www.penzugyminiszterium.hu •
: : Ministry of Finance
• www.p-m.hu •
: : State Tax Authority : :
• www.apeh.hu •
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Incomes and cost of living
The number of people employed In Hungary
was 3,932,000 in 2005 (the total population is
slightly below 10 million). However, the number of unemployed was 308,000, representing an unemployment rate of 7.3%. However,
it should be noted that the unemployment
rate is even lower in the western part of the
country, while due to unfavourable economic indicators in the eastern counties, the rate
is several times higher than the average.
Gross average income for 2005 was HUF
154 600, but a difference also appeared between the eastern and western counties in
this respect: incomes are higher in the economically more developed Transdanubia
region of the country, with Budapest the
having the highest incomes. The income of
those employed in intellectual professions
generally exceeds that of physical workers, and the worldwide difference between
the salaries of men and women is also noticeable, as a result of which women in the
majority of cases receive lower wages than
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men for the same work. The so-called‘Equal
Opportunities’Act, which prohibits discrimination between the sexes, is aimed at taking
action against such differences.
The government defines the amount of the
minimum compulsory wage each year (in the
event of an eight-hour working day in 2006,
HUF 62 500 a month), as well as the minimum
pension.
Useful links
: : Public Employment Service : :
• www.afsz.hu •
: : Ministry of Employment Policy and
Labour Affairs : :
• www.fmm.gov.hu •
: : National Pension Insurance Directorate : :
• www.onyf.hu •
: : Ministry of Health • www.eum.hu : :
: : Ministry of Economic Affairs and Transport : :
• www.gkm.hu •
: : Central Statistical Office : :
• www.ksh.hu •
Shopping
Shopping possibilities and habits in Hungary
reveal variations in respect of the provinces
and larger cities. Whereas small shops open
until late afternoon are typical in villages and
smaller towns, supermarkets and hypermarkets offering a wide range of goods are now
very popular in the large cities, where shoppers can find anything they might need 24
hours a day. Such large stores are usually built
outside the cities, on sections of road leading into the city, and attract customers with
their huge car parks, cheaper prices and extra
services.
Food stores are generally open from 6 a.m.
until 8 p.m., but non-stop stores can be found
in all cities. Smaller shops usually sell the same
products as large retail chains at a slightly
higher price. Other stores (clothes, shoes, stationery, gifts, furniture, etc.) are usually open
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., while stores in the
shopping and entertainment centres located
in large cities have longer business hours,
opening until 8 or 9 p.m.
The option of payment by bank card is not
always available to shoppers in smaller
stores, but this payment method is spreading, and the high number of cash dispensers
also helps to bridge any possible problems.
Nevertheless, cash payments may still be
deemed customary.
Banks and post offices are open to the public
from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m., but banks close earlier on Fridays, at 3 p.m. In addition, post offices staying open late are located in all cities,
including some open as late as 12 midnight.
Saturday opening of stores presents quite a
variable picture: shops located in large cities and shopping centres are open all day on
both Saturdays and Sundays, while smaller
stores generally close at midday on Saturday
and remain closed until Monday.
It is no longer customary to close for lunch
in most Hungarian shops, meaning stores are
open to the public continuously. There are increasing opportunities to buy by mail order,
either from catalogues, over the telephone,
of from stores offering such services over the
Internet. This method can be used to access
a wide range of goods, including household
machines, clothes and food. Home deliveries
are particularly popular for meals.
Buying on credit is particularly common for
durable consumer goods. Bank officials usually work at larger stores, providing shoppers
with on-site information on the conditions
for buying in instalments, and concluding
the contract, thereby facilitating purchase of
the relevant product. It is usually a condition
of the loan that the shopper must show certification of income from his or her employer.
Larger retail stores have also launched their
own shopping cards, encouraging people to
buy on credit or using bonus points.
Useful links
• aruhaz.lap.hu •
• vasarlas.origo.hu •
• fogyasztovedelem.lap.hu •
• bank.lap.hu •
• www.posta.hu •
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Accommodation
Most housing is privately owned, long-term
leasing is not wide-spread in Hungary, accordingly blocks of flats are not typical. Conversely, all over the country many private individuals rent out their real estate being out
of use. Real estate prices show considerable
variations depending on the environment,
the approach, the condition and other factors of the real estate. Prices for real estates
in good condition, built in Budapest are the
highest. It is generally held that the price for
smaller flats is comparatively higher than for
bigger ones. In addition, leasing a flat in a
small town is approximately for third-quarter
the price than in the bigger cities.
Information on housing for sale and rent is
available from individual advertising newspapers and real estate agents. In order to clarify
legal status, whether purchasing or renting
housing, it is advisable to look at the ownership deed for the given real estate, which
contains public data in respect of the owner
of and encumbrances on the real estate, and
may be applied for at the competent land
registry office. Sale and purchase of real estate
is only valid, if it is incorporated in a contract
countersigned by a lawyer or public notary,
and the contract is submitted to the competent land registry office for the purpose of
registering a change of ownership rights.
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In the event of buying a house or flat, the following public utilities shall be responsible for
procedures and require notification of data:
• regional electricity service providers (specified company provides electricity in the
given location, the market is not liberalised);
• regional gas works (same situation as for
electricity providers);
• local water works.
Monthly fees shall be paid for such service
provision. Fees are generally paid on the basis of a fixed lump sum, with accounts settled
annually. When using such services, contracts
shall also be concluded with the following organisations:
• telephone company (the communications
market is liberalised, meaning there is a free
choice of service providers),
• cabel television service provider (also liberalised).
Useful links
• www.ingatlan.com •
• www.ingatlan.lap.hu •
• lakas.lap.hu •
• www.alberlet.hu •
• www.alompalota.hu •
• www.ingatlankereso.hu •
• www.degaz.hu •
• www.demasz.hu •
• vizmu.lap.hu •
• www.matav.hu •
• kabel.lap.hu •
The cultural and social life
There are considerable opportunities for entertainment and relaxation in Hungary. Since
the social and political changes, a wider variety of programmes and leisure opportunities
have become available, primarily in the cities.
In addition to one-off programmes, there are
also annual large-scale events, such as the
Tisza Lake Festival, the Kapolcs Artists Valley,
Budapest Spring Festival or the Island Festival
for young people, which primarily offers musical programmes.
The various restaurants, pubs and cafés frequently offer cultural programmes (readings,
discussion evenings), thereby linking cultural
relaxation to a conversation without any commitments. In addition to cinemas primarily
showing mainstream films, there is also an art
cinema network, where interested viewers
can watch artistic films. These are generally
less modern, though cheaper than the multiplexes. The state also subsidises the production of Hungarian films. There are opportunities to visit theatres in all cities, though most
are based in the capital city, which also offers
the widest selection in terms of the number
of plays. The Budapest Opera House offers relaxation opportunities to lovers of this genre,
and its artists are recognised throughout the
world.
All cities offer sporting opportunities: a variety of sports can be pursued at various sports
facilities and fields, and the option of practising unusual, extreme sports exists in larger
cities. Internet sites of certain institutions and
settlements, and magazines recommending
programmes provide information on leisure
events.
Useful links
: : Leisure • www.est.hu : :
: : Culture • www.kultura.lap.hu : :
: : Sport • www.magyar.sport.hu : :
: : Opera • www.opera.hu : :
: : Theatre • www.szinhaz.hu : :
: : Newspapers • ujsag.lap.hu : :
: : Hungarian values, cultural programmes : :
• www.vendegvaro.hu •
: : Homepage of the Ticket Express : :
• www.tex.hu •
: : Restaurants • etterem.lap.hu : :
: : Timetables • www.menetrendek.hu : :
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Transport
By virtue of its location, Hungary plays a key
role in international traffic in Europe and has
significant levels of both business and private
traffic. After accession to the European Union,
Hungary’s eastern and southern borders shall
also become the EU’s borders, which is likely
to place increasing burdens on traffic and
transport.
The country’s motorways operate using a toll
system. Vouchers are valid for various durations: four-day, 10-day, 31-day and annual
motorway passes are available.
The speeds allowed on the roads are as follows:
• on motorways: 130km/h;
• on public highways: 90km/h;
• in built-up areas: 50km/h.
Major discounts available on trains and buses:
• children aged under six travel for free;
• those holding student identification cards
receive a 67.5% discount;
• those aged under 26 are entitled to a 33%
discount; (only on trains)
• those living with a disability and people
accompanying them are given a 67.5% discount;
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• pensioners can travel at 50% cost, up to 16
times a year;
• travel over the age of 65 is free of charge;
• service providers may also specify further
group allowances and allowances linked to
certain events.
Local public transport can also be used in the
cities. Buses are available in most cities, while
trams run in Budapest, Szeged and Debrecen.
Budapest also has three metro lines, as well
as trolleybuses. Prices of local city transport
are proportionately higher than long-distance transport (a single ticket valid for any
means of public transport costs HUF 185 in
Budapest, as at February 2006).
Useful links
: : Ministry of Economy and Transport : :
• www.gkm.cov.hu •
: : About Hungarian motorways : :
• www.autopalya.hu •
: : Hungarian Airlines • www.malev.hu : :
: : Hungarian State Railways • www.mav.hu : :
: : Buses and schedules • www.volan.hu : :
The Hungarian education system
Children in Hungary may attend crèches,
where they are looked after in small groups
under full or half-day supervision, until the
age of three.
From the age of three, small children may attend nursery schools until such time as they
attend school, and before school registration, they shall be obliged to attend nursery
school courses for one year.
In larger settlements, parents are generally able to choose between several types of
nursery school, as in addition to traditional
local government nursery schools, nurseries
run by churches or foundations are also available. There are also various nursery schools
based on learning methods, for example institutions specialised in language training or
sporting activities.
Children in Hungary reaching the necessary level of development to be admitted to
school are subject to compulsory education
from the calendar year in which they reach
the age of six on or before 31 May. Upon parental request, children may also be subject
to compulsory education if they reach the
age of six on or before 31 December. Compulsory education lasts until the end of the
academic year in which the student reaches
the age of 18.
The official teaching language in all educational institutions is Hungarian. However,
there are also schools that teach in various
languages of nationalities living in Hungary,
where some subjects are taught in foreign
languages.
There is a wide range of both primary and secondary schools, and a great many specialised
educational institutions providing students
with greater and deeper knowledge, and
greater opportunities in certain areas. For
example, Hungary has schools specialising in
languages, branches of science or sport, and
so-called alternative schools, which train and
educate children based on methods at variance from the traditional Hungarian education system.
The academic year begins in the last week of
August or the first week of September, and
lasts until the middle of June.
During the summer break of around two and
a half months, most schools organise camps
and training sessions for students. Teaching
takes place within the framework of 45-minute lessons at all levels up to and including
secondary schools, and such lessons are separated by breaks of 10 minutes. Students in
primary school have on average five lessons
per day, those in secondary school six. Primary schools provide an afternoon service,
when trained teachers look after children after lessons have finished.
School studies may be divided into several
stages:
• the traditional arrangement is for students to
progress to a four-year secondary institution,
having completed eight years at primary
school (8 + 4 years);
• they can now do so after four or six years,
provided they continue studies in a
grammar school (4 + 8, or 6 + 6 year system).
The following secondary education institutions exist:
• grammar school
(provides general education);
• specialist secondary school
(in addition to general education, also provides a specialist qualification);
• vocational school
(provides professional qualification, places
great emphasis on practical training).
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The highest level of qualification achievable
at secondary school is the school-leaving
exam, which consists of compulsory and optional subjects (compulsory subjects include
mathematics, history, Hungarian language
and literature, or any foreign language). The
school-leaving exam is a compulsory condition for further study in a higher education
institution.
There are two types of higher education institution in Hungary:
• college (no more than four years),
• university (usually five, sometimes six years).
Further information on higher education institutions is available on their websites. Study
in state educational institutions and the acquisition of the first diploma in higher education institutions is free of charge. However,
church-run and other non-state schools may
ask for tuition fees for their services.
Nursery schools and primary schools are located in almost every settlement in the country, while secondary schools are only found
in towns and cities, and higher education institutions are only in the larger cities. Schools
may hold entrance exams within the frameworks of legal regulations to select future
students. However, this is only customary for
renowned and popular secondary schools
and higher education institutions. Should an
entrance exam be required, the school shall
provide official information to those seeking
admission on the conditions for entry to the
school. Secondary schools hold entrance exams in the spring, higher education institutions in the summer, after the academic year
has ended.
Life-long learning made unavoidable by rapidly changing economic requirements, associated labour market changes and almost
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universal career changes, has put adult training into the spotlight. As a result, evening,
correspondence and distance learning programmes are especially popular in secondary
and higher education.
Useful links
: : Ministry of Education; Hungarian
Equivalence and Information Center : :
• www.om.hu •
: : On higher education and entrance exams : :
• www.felvi.hu •
: : Portal on Learning
Opportunities Throughout Europe : :
• europa.eu.int/ploteus •
Private life (birth, marriage, deaths)
Children’s births are registered in the competent settlement for the place of birth.
Registration in the register of births takes
place upon notification, on the basis of the
minutes recorded thereof. In the event of
births in hospitals or other health care institutions, the institution performs such notification. The birth certificate contains the data
of the child and parents, and designation of
foreign citizenship, where applicable. After
registration in the register of births, the registrar issues an extract from the register free
of charge, which contains the child’s most
important personal data (name, sex, place
and time of birth, name of parents and any
comments). Such extracts from the register
of births are required in various official procedures throughout our lives.
Cases of death shall be entered into the register of deaths in compliance with the place
of death, on the basis of the minutes thereof.
After registration, the registrar issues an extract from the register of deaths to a close
relative free of charge, containing the name,
sex and family status of the deceased, place
and time of death, name of parents, and any
other comments. An extract from the register
of deaths must be shown, inter alia, in exercising wills and, in the event of membership
of a company, before the court of company
registration.
Marriages may be conducted in front of the
registrar after a period of 30 days’notification
of such intention. Marriages shall be held in
public and in the presence of two witnesses,
such that the parties jointly declare their intention to conclude a marriage, in front of the
registrar, and the registrar shall enter this fact
into the register of marriages. A marriage certificate is issued from the register, which later
serves to certify the holding of the marriage.
Under the effective legal regulations in
Hungary, marriage may be concluded between men and women, and cohabitation of
people of the same sex does not entail any
legal consequences in law. However, Hungarian law attaches certain legal consequences
to partner relationships between men and
women (e.g. partners are classified as close
relatives and may acquire common ownership during cohabitation, in proportion to
their involvement, etc.). In addition to civil
law marriages, it is common in Hungary to
hold a church wedding. This, however, unlike
the civil wedding, does not have implications
for legal consequences of family and property law and is not state recognised. Church
ceremonies may therefore only be held after
the conclusion of a civil marriage.
The health system
Anyone who, on the basis of Hungarian or
community regulations, is classified as insured shall be entitled to the benefits of the
system of health care provision in Hungary.
Pursuant to the law on social insurance, everyone is insured who:
• is an employee or has another legal relationship aimed at performing work;
• is a student;
• is in receipt of unemployment benefit;
• performs entrepreneurial activity and
• clerical person.
Health insurance services are defined in law
No. LXXXIII of 1997. Use of such services takes
place on the basis of an insurance relationship,
based on the payment of a specified amount
of contributions. Participation in the social
insurance system, i.e. entitlement to benefits
thereof, for Hungarian citizens, may be proved
by the‘TAJ card’(containing the relevant social insurance identification code and other
personal data), and for citizens of EU Member
States, by the appropriate E form.
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I.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Health care benefits include financial
benefits and benefits in kind
Benefits in kind
In compliance with age, everyone is entitled to participate in a variety of checkups (e.g. free dental examinations for
children, lung and cancer screening).
Family doctor services (general examinations and advice, curative treatment, assessment of earning capacity, etc.) may,
as per the statutes, be used at freely
chosen family doctors. In the event of
the family doctor being unavailable, the
competent family doctor for the residence may be contacted.
Citizens under 18 or over 60 years of age
are entitled to free dental provision and,
regardless of age, everyone is entitled to
a dentist focal examination.
In the event of illness, insured parties are
entitled to examinations and curative treatment in the framework of specialist outpatient services, including any necessary
medicines or bandages, to specialist medical opinions and care necessary for curative
treatment and in specified cases to the assessment of earning capacity.
(The family doctor usually refers patients to
specialist examinations, but most specialist medical consultancies can also be used
without this.)
By means of reference, or in the absence
thereof, where necessary, everyone is
entitled to inpatient services (i.e. hospital
care) and in this framework to placement
in hospital, curative treatment, medicines, care and meals.
Expectant mothers may claim pregnancy
care and birth services, and termination
of pregnancy in certain cases defined by
law.
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7. Benefits in kind also include necessary
rehabilitation for individual illnesses (e.g.
sanatorium treatment, physiotherapy,
etc.) and, where necessary, patient trans•
portation and emergency treatment. All
such services are free of charge to members of the social insurance scheme.
8. The state provides a price subsidy forvarious medicines, aids to curative treatment
and individual therapeutic procedures
(e.g. medicinal bathing).
9. Insured parties referred to outpatient
services, inpatient institutions or therapeutic services and rehabilitation are
entitled to subsidy for travel costs. The
beneficiary shall be entitled to subsidy
on scheduled means of local transport,
up to the amount of full adult fare.
II. Financial benefits
1. The insured are entitled to pregnancy
and confinement benefit for a period of
24 weeks. This accounts for 70% of daily
average salary.
2. Child care benefit is due at the earliest
from the day following the expiry of
pregnancy and confinement benefit (24
weeks), or the appropriate period thereof, until the child reaches the age of two.
Childcare benefit shall be equivalent to
70% of the average salary per calendar
day. The monthly maximum amount of
benefit is defined in the Annual Budget
Act (the maximum monthly amount for
2006 is HUF 83 000).
3. Anyone is entitled to sick pay who, during the term of insurance, or on the
first, second or third day following termination thereof, becomes incapable of
earning (due to illness or pregnancy) and
pays health insurance contributions.
Sick pay shall be due for the period of
earning incapacity, though for no more
than one year during the term of the
insurance relationship, and for 90 days
following termination of the insurance
relationship. In the case of continual insurance coverage of at least two years,
the amount of sick pay shall be 70% of
average income, and for shorter periods
of insurance or during periods of inpatient therapeutic institution services, 60%.
4. Accident benefit is due in the event of
industrial accidents or occupational disease. The injured party, in the form of
accident benefits, shall be entitled to accident health care services, accident sick
pay and an accident allowance.
Useful links
: : Ministry of Health : :
• www.eszcsm.hu •
: : National Health Insurance Fund : :
• www.oep.hu •
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General organisation
Hungary follows the distribution system of
definitions used in the European Union from
the point of view of benefits provided and
the administrative system thereof, and thus
uses the following concepts:
• social protection;
• social security;
• social insurance;
• social assistance.
Social protection is the widest concept, comprising all forms of social subsidy. It rests on
two pillars: social security benefits and social
assistance.
The concept of social protection includes all
forms of benefits and services, whether or not
they are linked to payment of contributions
(e.g. unemployment benefit), are universal,
i.e. allowances based on objective rights (e.g.
family supplement), or assistance based on
need (e.g. benefits subject to the effect of
social law and exceptional child protection
subsidy). Social protection therefore includes
all three types of benefit: benefits based on
insurance, universal benefits, and assistance,
including:
• sickness and maternity;
• handicap and disability;
• unemployment;
• old age benefits
(pensions and pension-type benefits);
• benefits for relatives;
• family benefits;
• social benefits.
Social security on the other hand is a more
restricted concept than social protection.
It includes allowances due in the event of
the incidence of defined social risks (unemployment, industrial accident, occupational
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disease, disability, old age, death, sickness,
maternity, except for poverty), and which are
either related to earning activity, and thereby
payment of contributions, or are due on the
basis of objective rights, pursuant to status
(e.g. citizenship) defined by law. Assistance,
however, does not form part of social security. The concept of social security thus comprises the following three types of benefit:
• social insurance benefits;
• universal benefits based on objective rights;
• special non-contributory benefits, whichsupplement or replace the benefits of the
first two groups.
The concept of social security also defines
the position of social insurance in relation
to social security. Social insurance benefits
forming part of social security constitute just
one group, the group of benefits only available through contribution payments. Typical
of this group are health care and pension system, or some unemployment benefits.
The concept of social assistance includes assistance awarded to those outside social security and in basic need. The objective is to
subsidise persons without appropriate material resources. However, it is not sufficient
for the relative party to comply with a legally
defined status, for example his or her income
does not exceed the minimum old age pension. In addition, the person or organisation
awarding assistance shall also be required
to take need into consideration, and to base
their assessment on fairness.
Sickness insurance
Everyone, irrespective of citizenship, is subject to the effect of compulsory insurance
and is therefore insured and entitled to make
use of health insurance benefits from the first
day of employment.
In so far as the foreigner, in respect of his or
her employment, is not classified as insured,
in the absence of provision to the contrary in
international agreements, he/she shall be entitled to voluntarily join the health insurance
scheme. He or she then has to pay relatively
high monthly contributions (100% of the
minimum wage).
The insured (contribution payers) and those
entitled to health care services (pensioners,
students, dependent relatives) may, from the
first day and without respect for their citizenship, make use of the full range of health care
services at any service having a contract with
the National Health Insurance Fund. Only
persons concluding agreements are entitled
to provision contrary to the general regulations, however, this can be justified by the
fact that they do not come under the effect
of compulsory insurance, and relates not only
to foreign citizens, but also to Hungarian citizens not domiciled in Hungary.
Beyond the insured and beneficiaries, or persons entitled pursuant to the agreement, it is
only possible to make use of health care provision in Hungary free of charge in the context of the regulations of international agreements. Persons not classified above may only
make use of services alongside an obligation
to pay. Although in the context of law No CLIV
of 1997 on Health Care, emergency provision
is due free of charge, in practice this only
covers cases of emergency ambulance treatment. It should be noted that the practice of
free emergency ambulance treatment is now
subject to change, as a result of the slightly
ambiguous definition of the Health Care Act.
Sick pay may be granted to insured claimants who have or had insurance relationships
and who, as a result of the illness, have been
classified by the relevant medical officer as
incapable of earning, and were also obliged
to pay 3% health insurance contributions. For
the first 15 working days of earning incapacity, sickness leave rather than sick pay shall be
due. Sickness leave is only due in the event of
the employee’s own illness. Home workers,
sole entrepreneurs, assisting family members, or members of partnership enterprises
(unless they carry out work in the framework
of employment), persons or apprentices conducting work on the basis of assignment, and
persons becoming incapable of earning after
their employment has terminated are not entitled to sickness leave. For the period of sickness leave, 80% of the attendance fee shall be
due, which is paid by the employer and forms
part of tax and income subject to contributions. For insured parties entitled to sickness
leave, sick pay shall be established from the
day following expiry of sickness leave.
Sick pay is due for periods of certified earning
incapacity from the date following the expiry
of entitlement to sickness leave for the claimant’s illness, and for no more than one year.
However, sick pay is only due for one year if
the claimant was continually insured for at
least one year directly preceding his or her
earning incapacity. Several factors affect the
establishment of the amount of sick pay, primarily income forming the basis for sick pay.
The amount, depending on the period spent
in insurance, shall be 60% or 70% of average
daily salary.
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Maternity insurance
Pregnancy and confinement benefit is due
to anyone who is insured for 180 days within
two years prior to birth, and who gives birth
during the period of insurance or within 42
days following the termination of insurance,
or who gives birth more than 42 days following termination of the insurance but within a
further 28 days of the period of payment of
sick pay or accident sick pay.
Pregnancy and confinement benefit is due
for the period of maternity leave, which on
the basis of the Labour Code is 24 weeks.
Four weeks of such period shall fall before
the expected date of birth.
Pregnancy and confinement benefit amounts
to 70% of average daily salary.
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Invalidity insurance
Insured persons are entitled to disability pension who:
a) as a result of a deterioration in health, or
physical or intellectual deterioration, have
lost at least 67% of working capacity and no
improvement is anticipated in this condition
for one year,
b) have acquired the prescribed period of service,
c) do not regularly work, or whose salary is
substantially lower than their salary before
the disablement.
Salary shall be deemed substantially lower if
it falls below 80% of the salary before illness.
Old-age insurance
In the framework of compulsory pension
insurance, in Hungary a so-called mixed system consisting of two pillars operates. Pillar I
works by means of a pay-as-you-go system
of services, and represents a share of around
¾. Pillar II is a private pension system working on the principle of capital funds based
on contributions and in the organisational
frameworks of private pension funds, which
provide approx. ¼ of pension services. The
two pillar pension system developed in the
framework of the compulsory insurance system is also supplemented by a third pillar:
the system of elderly savings organised in
voluntary mutual pension schemes launched
in 1993, which the state encourages through
tax allowances.
Another non-pension insurance element of
social insurance for the elderly is the elderly
allowance system introduced in 1998. The
social allowance system operates separately
from pension insurance in respect of finance
and organisation, and in this framework local
governments, on the basis of actual income
or financial circumstances, provide the elderly in need
with a minimum income, or supplement existing very low incomes to such minimum
level.
The pension insurance system in Hungary
constitutes a unified system for the vast majority of those insured. This means regulations
are completely identical for the vast majority of those conducting earning activity, irrespective of the form of the legal relationship
in which they conduct such activity.
In pillar I, the insured pay pension insurance
contributions determined on the basis of
present gross monthly salary to the State
Pension Insurance Fund, totalling 8.5%.
Contributions encumbering the employer
shall be paid up to a specified income limit
(double the prevailing national gross average
salary) on parts of salary or income. The individual does not have to pay contributions on
salary parts over this level. In calculating the
employer’s contribution payment obligation
there is no upper income limit.
Compulsory pension insurance in Hungary
extends to every citizen conducting earning
activity, without consideration for the legal
form in which the activity is conducted.
The conditions for entitlement to old age
pension:
1. Minimum insurance (period of service):
for partial pension in pillar I, 15 years’
insurance or contribution payment period is required, while a 20-year period
is required for entitlement to full pension, which period includes time spent
on sickness leave, on sick pay, pregnancy
and confinement benefit, and periods of
military service or unemployment provision. There is no minimum private pension scheme membership time stipulated in pillar II. For membership periods
shorter than 180 months, the provision
may be taken up in one lump sum.
2. Pension age limit: in both pillars the age
limit providing entitlement to old age
pension for both sexes uniformly has
been set at 62 from 2009.
Regulations for calculating pension provision:
in pillar I, the amount of pension depends on
the size of salaries and the duration of insurance period. A minimum amount exists, and
the pension may not be more than the amount
of average salary serving as the basis for calculation. There is no guaranteed minimum for
lifetime allowance provided by pillar II.
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Supplement for dependents: relatives and
children maintained by pensioners in Hungary are not entitled to additional pensions
or supplements through the pension system.
Subsidy of dependents takes place in the
framework of the social system, operating
separately from pension insurance.
Pension alongside salary: in Hungary pensions are due without restriction, irrespective
of whether or not the pensioner conducts
earning activity.
Taxation of pensions: pensions originating
from pillar I are not classified as taxable income. If other taxable income exists alongside the pension, this in itself is taxed under
the general regulations. Services originating
from pillar II are taxed in a special way: 50% of
the highest rating tax shall be paid.
Survivors’ pensions
Widow’s pension system
Anyone is entitled to a widow’s pension
whose deceased spouse or partner acquired
the insurance period necessary for old age or
disability pension, or who died as an old age
or disability pensioner.
A widow’s pension due under any title shall
be classified as tax-exempt income, and any
taxable income and salary earned in addition
shall be independently taxable in accordance
with the general regulations.
Orphan benefit
Children are entitled to orphan benefit whose
parent(s) acquired the necessary period of
service for old age or disability pension by
the time of his/her death, or died as an oldage or disability pensioner. Orphan benefit
is also due to adopted children, brothers and
sisters and grandchildren, if the deceased
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maintained them in his/her own household,
and there is no capable relative under an obligation to maintain the child. Entitlement to
orphan benefit is not affected if the child or
his/her living parent gets married, or they are
adopted.
Orphan benefit, in the event of the conditions
of entitlement being fulfilled, is due from the
date of death (at the earliest) until the child
reaches the age of 16. If the child is studying
at an educational institution in daytime study,
orphan benefit shall be due for the period of
studies, but not beyond the age of 25.
The minimum orphan benefit is determined
by law, and there is no maximum amount.
Orphan benefit is tax exempt income.
Parent’s pension
Parents are entitled to a parental pension if
their child died after acquiring the necessary
period of service for old age or disability pension, or died as a disability pensioner, if
• the parent was disabled at the time of the
child’s death, or had reached the age of 65,
• the parent had largely been maintained
by his/her child for one year prior to his/her
death.
Entitlement also extends to grandparents if
they are being maintained by a grandchild
and foster parents if they have kept their foster child for a minimum of 10 years.
Insurance for occupational
accidents and diseases
Accident disability benefits
Beneficiaries are identical to the persons
entitled to old age or disability pension. In
the event of an industrial accident or occupational disease, no prior insurance period is
stipulated for entitlement. Further conditions
of entitlement to accident disability pension
are identical to those of disability pension,
with the obvious difference that the 67% reduction in working capacity arose due to an
industrial accident or occupational disease.
The level of accident disability pension depends on the degree of disability and the
duration of insurance.
Accident relative’s benefits
If death takes place as a result of an industrial
accident, the relatives, widows, orphans and
parents, depending on the periods of insurance of the deceased, shall be entitled to the
relative’s benefits outlined in the foregoing.
Family benefits
There is a wide range of family benefits available in Hungary, and by European standards,
allowances are high. In addition to the benefits outlined, the settlement local government may, in a decree, supplement such
benefits on behalf of the socially needy, under the terms and in the manner specified
in the decree, and may establish other cash
subsidies.
An example of this could be one-off assistance provided by the competent local
government for the domicile, in an amount
agreeing with maternity subsidy, or the
‘school-starting subsidy’, provided once a
year.
The following are the major types of family
benefits in Hungary:
• childcare benefit,
• regular child protection subsidy,
• exceptional child protection subsidy,
• family supplement,
• childcare assistance,
• child raising subsidy,
• maternity subsidy.
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Unemployment benefits
Act IV of 1991 on Promoting Employment
and Providing for the Unemployed has been
amended by Act LXX of 2005, which entered into force 1 November 2005. With the
amendment a new job-seeker benefit system has been set up. The former unemployment benefits have been deleted and new
types of benefits, namely job-seeker benefit
and job-seeker aid have been introduced.
The aim of the new system was, firstly, to facilitate the unemployed persons to find a job,
secondly, to ensure that any group of the unemployed should not receive lower amount
of benefit. Any decrease in the daily average
benefit should be balanced by a longer benefit period.
a)
Job-seeker benefit shall be granted to a person who is a job-seeker, has spent at least 365
days in employment over the four years prior
to becoming job-seeker, is not eligible for
invalidity or accident-related disability pensions and is not receiving sick-pay, wishes to
find a job, but neither he, nor the competent
local employment centre is able to find him a
suitable job. The amount shall be calculated
on the basis of the average earnings of the
job-seeker during the four calendar quarters
prior to becoming job-seeker. If a job-seeker
was employed by more than one employer
during the four calendar quarters prior to
becoming job-seeker, the job-seeker benefit
shall be calculated on the basis of the average earnings received from all employers. If
the average earnings of a job-seeker cannot
be established, the job-seeker benefit shall
be calculated on the basis of the national average wage applicable to his last position, or
to similar jobs, prior to becoming job-seeker.
The basis of the job-seeker benefit for one
day shall be the thirtieth of the monthly av: : 36
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erage earnings of the job-seeker. In the first
period of payment, i.e. until the end of the
first half of the total payment period, not exceeding 91 days, the job-seeker benefit shall
be 60 per cent of the earlier average earnings
of the unemployed described above. In this
case the minimum amount of the benefit
shall be equal to 60 per cent of the mandatory minimum wage being in force on the
first day of eligibility for the job-seeker benefit and the maximum shall be 120 per cent
of the mandatory minimum wage. In the second half of the payment period, the amount
of job-seeker benefit shall equal 60 per cent
of the mandatory minimum wage being in
force on the first day of eligibility for the jobseeker benefit. If the average earning is lower
than the minimum amount of the job-seeker
benefit, the job-seeker benefit shall be equal
in both period of the payment to the average earnings. The duration of payment of
job-seeker benefit shall be calculated on the
basis of the period spent in employment by
the job-seeker during the four years prior to
becoming job-seeker. The duration of employment shall not include any period during
which the job-seeker was drawing job-seeker
benefits. There are some periods determined
by the act which extend the period of four
years defined above, if no employment relationship was established during such periods (e.g. regular and reserve military service,
civil service, sickness resulting in incapacity
to work, sick-leave with pay for taking care of
a sick child, etc.) The duration of payment in
the first period cannot exceed 91 days. The
length of the second period equals to the
remaining entitled days, maximum 179 days.
The total period of payment of job-seeker
benefit shall be 270 days.
b)
Job-seeker aid. Upon request, job-seeker shall
be granted a job-seeker aid, if the job-seeker
benefit was established for the job-seeker for
a period of at least 180 days, he has exhausted
his period of eligibility for job-seeker benefit,
and he submitted his application within 30
days starting from the termination of the payment of the job-seeker benefit, or the job-seeker has spent at least 200 days in employment
in the four calendar years prior to becoming
job-seeker, and is not entitled to job-seeker
benefit, or he has no more than five years to
attain retirement age as applicable at the time
of submission of the application, has received
job-seeker benefit for at least 140 days and has
exhausted the period of eligibility for job-seeker benefit (and he should reach retirement
age within three years of having exhausted
the job-seeker eligibility period, and should
have the service time necessary for old-age
pension). The amount of job-seeker aid shall
be 40 per cent of the mandatory minimum
wage being in force on the day of submission of the application. If the average earning
is lower than that amount, the amount of the
job-seeker aid shall be equal to the amount of
the average earnings. Job-seeker aid shall be
payable for 90 days, or for 180 days if the jobseeker has already reached 50 years of age at
the time of submission of the application, or, in
the case of elderly persons, until the job-seeker
becomes eligible for old-age pension, invalidity or accident-related disability pension.
Due to the shortness of the period of unemployment allowance payments, a larger role
is given to labour market services, to help the
unemployed capable of accepting work with
the targeted application of services to return
them to the labour market, even during the
allowance period.
Employment legal regulations assist placement of the unemployed partly by subsidies
directly provided to the unemployed and
partly to employers employing them.
The subsidies that may be provided to the
unemployed are the following:
• training course assistance,
• intensive job-seeking subsidy,
• assistance for the unemployed to become
entrepreneurs,
• self-employment subsidy.
The subsidies that may be provided to the
employer are:
• subsidies serving the expansion of employment (a subsidy may be provided to the employer in an amount up to 50-100% of the
employees’ wages for a period of no more
than one year if it undertakes certain conditions related to employment),
• subsidy of non-profit work,
• assumption of contributions relating to employment,
• subsidy of employment of those changing
job skills,
• subsidy of labour market schemes.
The settlement local governments pay regular social assistance to persons not having income from employment who, on the basis of
their social position, require such assistance.
Useful links
: : Employment Policy and Labour : :
• www.fmm.gov.hu •
: : National Employment Office : :
• www.afsz.hu •
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EURES advisers ‒ 2006
Baranya County Labour Centre
ZOLTÁN GOLYÁK
H-7621 Pécs, Király u. 46.
Phone: +36 (72) 506-898,
Fax: +36 (72) 506-804
e-mail: gozol@lab.hu
Bács-Kiskun County Labour Centre
ESZTER MOLNÁRNÉ HEGYI
H-6000 Kecskemét, Klapka u. 34.,
Phone: +36 (76) 486-588,
Fax: +36 (76) 486-592
e-mail: hegyie@lab.hu
Békés County Labour Centre
ATTILA JEGYINÁK
H-5600 Békéscsaba, Árpád sor 2/6.
Phone: +36 (66) 445-269/1126
Fax: +36 (66) 445-269
e-mail: jegyinaka@lab.hu
Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén County Labour Centre
SÁNDOR OROSZ
H-3900 Szerencs, Kassa út 23.
Phone: +36 (47) 361-909*15
Fax: +36 (47) 361-107*30
e-mail: oroszs@lab.hu
Csongrád County Labour Centre
ÁGNES GÁRGYÁN
H-6721 Szeged, Bocskai u. 10-12.
Phone: +36 (62) 561-579, Fax: +36 (62) 555-581
e-mail: gargyana@lab.hu
Gyor-Moson-Sopron County Labour Centre
MÓNIKA CZÉH
H-9021 Gyõr, Városház tér 3.
Phone: +36 (96) 529-910,
Fax: +36 (96) 319-399
e-mail: cmonika@lab.hu
Gyor-Moson-Sopron County Labour Centre
ADRIENN SZAKÁCS
H-9024 Gyor, Bartók Béla u. 2.
Phone: +36 (96) 327-666, Fax: +36 (96) 317-423
e-mail: szakacsadri@lab.hu
Hajdú-Bihar County Labour Centre
KRISZTINA ÁROKNÉ TOMA dr.
H-4025 Debrecen, Piac u. 54.
Phone: +36 (52) 507-442, +36 (80) 204-449
Fax: +36 (52) 418-229
e-mail: tomakrisztina@lab.hu
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Heves County Labour Centre
GÉZA SURÁNYI
H-3300 Eger, Kossuth L. u. 9.
Phone: +36 (36) 522-789, Fax: +36 (36) 522-779
e-mail: suranyig@lab.hu
Jász-Nagykun-Szolnok County Labour Centre
ÁGNES BOROS
H-5000 Szolnok, Kossuth L. út 6-8.
Phone: +36 (56) 375-388, Fax: +36 (56) 420-285
e-mail: borosa@lab.hu
Komárom-Esztergom County Labour Centre
PÉTER CSORDÁS
H-2800 Tatabánya, Ságvári út 20.
Phone/Fax: +36 (34) 317-070
e-mail: csordasp@lab.hu
Nógrád County Labour Centre
ATTILA LERCH
H-3100 Salgótarján, Alkotmány út 11.
Phone: +36 (32) 317-774, Fax: +36 (32) 310-327
e-mail: lercha@lab.hu
National Employent Office
GABRIELLA BONCZÓNÉ FARKAS
H-1086 Budapest, Szeszgyár u. 4.
Phone: +36 (1) 303 0822*129, Fax: +36 (1) 303 0824
e-mail: farkasg@lab.hu
National Employent Office
ILDIKÓ PAP
H-1086 Budapest, Szeszgyár u. 4.
Phone: +36 (1) 303-0822*130
Fax: +36 (1) 303-0824
e-mail: pappi@lab.hu
National Employent Office
ISTVÁN SÉRTO-RADICS
H-1086 Budapest, Szeszgyár u. 4.
Phone: +36 (1) 303-0822, Fax: +36 (1) 303-0824
e-mail: sertori@lab.hu
Somogy County Labour Centre
ZOLTÁN FRISS
H-7400 Kaposvár, Fo u. 37-39.
Phone: +36 (82) 505-523, Fax: +36 (82) 505-550
e-mail: frissz@lab.hu
Szabolcs-Szatmár-Bereg County Labour Centre
EMESE TÜRK
H-4400 Nyíregyháza, Egyház u. 13-15.
Phone: +36 (42) 594-016, Fax: +36 (42) 594-017
e-mail: turke@lab.hu
Tolna County Labour Centre
ZSOLT FARKAS
H-7090 Tamási, Szabadság u. 15.
Phone: +36 (74) 570-280,
Fax: +36 (74) 473-350
e-mail: farkaszso@lab.hu
Vas County Labour Centre
KRISZTINA MIZDA
H-9700 Szombathely, Hollán E. u. 1.
Phone: +36 (94) 520-420,
Fax: +36 (94) 505-747
e-mail: mizdak@lab.hu
Veszprém County Labour Centre
ANDRÁS KALMÁR
H-8200 Veszprém, Megyeház tér 3.
Phone/Fax: +36 (88) 328-504
e-mail: kalmarandras@lab.hu
Zala County Labour Centre
ILDIKÓ RADNÓTINÉ SÁNDOR
H-8900 Zalaegerszeg, Mártírok u. 42-44.
Phone/Fax: +36 (92) 549-480
e-mail: radnotinei@lab.hu
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